
Name: Date - Mr. Dowling
... and ended with a twenty-seven year long conflict between A__h__ns and S__ar__a called the P__l__p__n_e__i__n War. By the end of the Greco-Persian wars, A__h__ns had become the most powerful *p______ on the Greek *p__n__n__u_a through its position in the D__l__an League. Other poli resented Athens fo ...
... and ended with a twenty-seven year long conflict between A__h__ns and S__ar__a called the P__l__p__n_e__i__n War. By the end of the Greco-Persian wars, A__h__ns had become the most powerful *p______ on the Greek *p__n__n__u_a through its position in the D__l__an League. Other poli resented Athens fo ...
DOC - Mr. Dowling
... and ended with a twenty-seven year long conflict between A__h__ns and S__ar__a called the P__l__p__n_e__i__n War. By the end of the Greco-Persian wars, A__h__ns had become the most powerful *p______ on the Greek *p__n__n__u_a through its position in the D__l__an League. Other poli resented Athens fo ...
... and ended with a twenty-seven year long conflict between A__h__ns and S__ar__a called the P__l__p__n_e__i__n War. By the end of the Greco-Persian wars, A__h__ns had become the most powerful *p______ on the Greek *p__n__n__u_a through its position in the D__l__an League. Other poli resented Athens fo ...
Persian Empire
... and led him to invade the Greeks? 2. Who was the Battle of Marathon between? Who won? Why? 3. Who joined Athens when Darius’ son, Xerxes, attacked Greece? 4. How did the Persians get past the Greeks so that they could attack Athens? 5. Who won the Persian Wars? ...
... and led him to invade the Greeks? 2. Who was the Battle of Marathon between? Who won? Why? 3. Who joined Athens when Darius’ son, Xerxes, attacked Greece? 4. How did the Persians get past the Greeks so that they could attack Athens? 5. Who won the Persian Wars? ...
Ancient Greece - Mr. G Educates
... Athens makes Bad Decisions • Many men wanted to lead Athens • Different men would come to power & make ...
... Athens makes Bad Decisions • Many men wanted to lead Athens • Different men would come to power & make ...
Athens Gets Greedy
... 6.G.1.1 Explain how the physical features and human characteristics of a place influenced the development of civilizations, societies and regions (e.g., location near rivers and natural barriers, trading practices and spread of culture). 6.G.1.2 Explain the factors that influenced the movement o ...
... 6.G.1.1 Explain how the physical features and human characteristics of a place influenced the development of civilizations, societies and regions (e.g., location near rivers and natural barriers, trading practices and spread of culture). 6.G.1.2 Explain the factors that influenced the movement o ...
Warring City
... – During the Dorian Age, only the rich could afford bronze weapons – After the Dorian Age (750 BCE), iron replaced bronze and was more affordable – A new kind of army formed - merchants, artisans and small landowners could now afford to equip themselves ...
... – During the Dorian Age, only the rich could afford bronze weapons – After the Dorian Age (750 BCE), iron replaced bronze and was more affordable – A new kind of army formed - merchants, artisans and small landowners could now afford to equip themselves ...
persian Peloponnesian War facts1314
... * Persians were not expecting such a large army and were not prepared * Persian ships could not make it down the strait and got stuck, so the Greek plan worked! * As a result, the Greeks won this battle and the entire Persian War * As a result, the Greeks won the third battle * After this battle, th ...
... * Persians were not expecting such a large army and were not prepared * Persian ships could not make it down the strait and got stuck, so the Greek plan worked! * As a result, the Greeks won this battle and the entire Persian War * As a result, the Greeks won the third battle * After this battle, th ...
Unit 2: Greeks, Romans, the Rise of Christianity 4-6
... 6) The Mycenaean’s learned the value of ____________________ from the ____________________, as well as the adapted their _________________________ and influenced things like ___________________________________. (p.125) 7) Another culture on the Anatolia peninsula, _______________________, was though ...
... 6) The Mycenaean’s learned the value of ____________________ from the ____________________, as well as the adapted their _________________________ and influenced things like ___________________________________. (p.125) 7) Another culture on the Anatolia peninsula, _______________________, was though ...
Lesson 3: The Golden Age of Athens
... *They formed an alliance, an agreement to work together, called the Delian League. They forced citystates to join. It used the funds to put up public buildings. Athenian generals began to interfere in the affairs of other city-states. Other Greeks became angry and resentful. *Sparta was the leader o ...
... *They formed an alliance, an agreement to work together, called the Delian League. They forced citystates to join. It used the funds to put up public buildings. Athenian generals began to interfere in the affairs of other city-states. Other Greeks became angry and resentful. *Sparta was the leader o ...
The Greek City
... Foot soldiers stood side by side, holding a spear in one hand, and a shield in another Fearsome formation called phalanx, was most powerful fighting force in ancient world v.oliver ...
... Foot soldiers stood side by side, holding a spear in one hand, and a shield in another Fearsome formation called phalanx, was most powerful fighting force in ancient world v.oliver ...
ancient greece - Mesa Public Schools
... islands, and has many tall mountains, the Greeks began to build city-states instead of one country. A city-state (Polis) is a city with its own laws, rulers, and money. City-states were cities that acted like countries ...
... islands, and has many tall mountains, the Greeks began to build city-states instead of one country. A city-state (Polis) is a city with its own laws, rulers, and money. City-states were cities that acted like countries ...
Leadership Books: The Classics, Part 2
... a god-sent plague forces Agamemnon’s hand, he decides he will put Achilles in his place by taking away Achilles’ own “war prize”: the woman Briseis. Keep in mind that Agamemnon is not Achilles’ king. Indeed, the “heroes” of the Iliad are all leaders of their own cities, and Agamemnon is merely first ...
... a god-sent plague forces Agamemnon’s hand, he decides he will put Achilles in his place by taking away Achilles’ own “war prize”: the woman Briseis. Keep in mind that Agamemnon is not Achilles’ king. Indeed, the “heroes” of the Iliad are all leaders of their own cities, and Agamemnon is merely first ...
Consequences of the Persian Wars
... Athenians of ancient Greece, are AWESOME! We led the Greeks to victory in the Persian War. Everyone knows we’re the best! ...
... Athenians of ancient Greece, are AWESOME! We led the Greeks to victory in the Persian War. Everyone knows we’re the best! ...
Name: Period_________ Date:______ Score:______/25 Document
... * In 431 B.C.E. the Athenian leader Pericles delivered a funeral oration for Greek military who died in the early stages of what became a long war with Sparta. This Peloponnesian War led ultimately to the defeat of Athens and to a political decline in classical Greece as a whole.* Athenian Democracy ...
... * In 431 B.C.E. the Athenian leader Pericles delivered a funeral oration for Greek military who died in the early stages of what became a long war with Sparta. This Peloponnesian War led ultimately to the defeat of Athens and to a political decline in classical Greece as a whole.* Athenian Democracy ...
Athens` Age of Glory
... The Greeks were eventually defeated after the Persian soldiers were shown a secret mountain way around the pass. Spartan king ,Leonidas, with his Royal Guard of 300 men delayed the Persians at a narrow pass at Thermopylae where they held out for three days before being overwhelmed and killed. Ever ...
... The Greeks were eventually defeated after the Persian soldiers were shown a secret mountain way around the pass. Spartan king ,Leonidas, with his Royal Guard of 300 men delayed the Persians at a narrow pass at Thermopylae where they held out for three days before being overwhelmed and killed. Ever ...
Peloponnesian War: Sparta - Carolina International Relations
... Salamis, where Athens’ outnumbered fleet defeated the Persian fleet, forcing the Persian army to withdraw for lack of supplies. Yet after the defeat of the Persians, the Greek coalition broke into two f ...
... Salamis, where Athens’ outnumbered fleet defeated the Persian fleet, forcing the Persian army to withdraw for lack of supplies. Yet after the defeat of the Persians, the Greek coalition broke into two f ...
Greece fell into a dark age!
... went from town to town, earning a living telling stories, the same stories over and over, until nearly everyone in ancient Greece knew all the stories by heart. And they told these stories in the same language. Pretty soon, everyone in ancient Greece knew the Greek language by heart. It was the stor ...
... went from town to town, earning a living telling stories, the same stories over and over, until nearly everyone in ancient Greece knew all the stories by heart. And they told these stories in the same language. Pretty soon, everyone in ancient Greece knew the Greek language by heart. It was the stor ...
Pericles` Plan for Athens Ch 5 Ancient Greece Sec 3: Democracy
... • Sparta and Athens sign truce in 421 B.C. Sparta Gains Victory • 415 B.C. Athens renews war, attacks Syracuse; is defeated in 413 B.C. • Athens and allies surrender to Sparta in 404 B.C. • Spartan victory in the Peloponnesian War ended the golden age of Athens, the Athenian Empire and the Athenian ...
... • Sparta and Athens sign truce in 421 B.C. Sparta Gains Victory • 415 B.C. Athens renews war, attacks Syracuse; is defeated in 413 B.C. • Athens and allies surrender to Sparta in 404 B.C. • Spartan victory in the Peloponnesian War ended the golden age of Athens, the Athenian Empire and the Athenian ...
CHAPTER 5 • Section 3
... Tell students to choose three of these themes and to think about recent television shows or movies that they have viewed that deal with similar subject matter. For example, the movies in the Star Wars series deal with war. When they have come up with one example for each theme, ask them to write a p ...
... Tell students to choose three of these themes and to think about recent television shows or movies that they have viewed that deal with similar subject matter. For example, the movies in the Star Wars series deal with war. When they have come up with one example for each theme, ask them to write a p ...
Ancient Greece Power Pt
... the two sides battled until the Greeks finally seized Troy and burned the city to the ground. Believed to be a fairy tale until Heinrich Schliemann ...
... the two sides battled until the Greeks finally seized Troy and burned the city to the ground. Believed to be a fairy tale until Heinrich Schliemann ...
PELOPONNESIAN WAR After the Persian Wars a man named
... Beautify Athens: Pericles used the Delian League money to rebuild and beautify Athens. This made other citystates very angry with Athens. ...
... Beautify Athens: Pericles used the Delian League money to rebuild and beautify Athens. This made other citystates very angry with Athens. ...
Untitled
... illegitimates (nothoi) and mothakes (probably offspring of male Spartiates by helot women), categories whi together incorporated those who failed to qualify for full membership on grounds of wealth, parentage, courage or other unknown factors.10 In its heyday Sparta operated a system whi appeared ...
... illegitimates (nothoi) and mothakes (probably offspring of male Spartiates by helot women), categories whi together incorporated those who failed to qualify for full membership on grounds of wealth, parentage, courage or other unknown factors.10 In its heyday Sparta operated a system whi appeared ...
The Early Greeks
... your textbook to decide if a statement is true or false. Write T or F in the blank, and if a statement is false, rewrite it correctly on the line. 1. The mainland of Greece is a peninsula, a body of land with water on three sides. 2. The island of Crete lies northwest of Greece and was the home of t ...
... your textbook to decide if a statement is true or false. Write T or F in the blank, and if a statement is false, rewrite it correctly on the line. 1. The mainland of Greece is a peninsula, a body of land with water on three sides. 2. The island of Crete lies northwest of Greece and was the home of t ...
The Peloponnesian War. The years that followed Greece`s victory
... effort. The people of Syracuse heard the Athenians were coming, and so they prepared for war. Alkibiades and the other generals participating in the expedition disagreed on tactics. Just after Alkibiades set sail for Sicily, a scandal in which he was implicated came to light. The Athenians were alar ...
... effort. The people of Syracuse heard the Athenians were coming, and so they prepared for war. Alkibiades and the other generals participating in the expedition disagreed on tactics. Just after Alkibiades set sail for Sicily, a scandal in which he was implicated came to light. The Athenians were alar ...
Spartan army
The Spartan army stood at the centre of the Spartan state, whose male and female citizens were trained in the discipline and honor of the warrior society. Subject to military drill from early manhood, the Spartans were one of the most feared military forces in the Greek world. At the height of Sparta's power – between the 6th and 4th centuries BC – it was commonly accepted that, ""one Spartan was worth several men of any other state."" According to Thucydides, the famous moment of Spartan surrender at the island of Sphacteria off of Pylos was highly unexpected. He said that ""it was the common perception at the time that Spartans would never lay down their weapons for any reason, be it hunger, or danger.""The iconic army was first coined by the Spartan legislator Lycurgus. In his famous quote of Sparta having a ""wall of men, instead of bricks"", he proposed to create a military-focused lifestyle reformation in the Spartan society in accordance to proper virtues such as equality for the male citizens, austerity, strength, and fitness. A Spartan man's involvement with the army began in infancy when he was inspected by the Gerousia. If the baby was found to be weak or deformed he was left at Mount Taygetus to die, since the world of the Spartans was no place for those who could not already fend for themselves. It should be noted, however, that the practice of discarding children at birth took place in Athens as well. Those deemed strong were then put in the agoge at the age of seven. Under the agoge the young boys or Spartiates were kept under intense and rigorous military training. Their education focused primarily on cunning, sports and war tactics, but also included poetry, music, academics, and sometimes politics. Those who passed the agoge by the age of 30 were given full Spartan citizenship.The term ""spartan"" became synonymous with multiple meanings such as: fearlessness, harsh and cruel life, bland and lacking creativity, or simplicity by design.